Animals with shrinking habitats are interbreeding, temporarily boosting populations but ultimately hurting species' survival
It's a product of the emerging field of terradynamics, which studies the movement of vehicles across shifting surfaces
With a surprisingly light touch, the New York City-based photographer instills feelings of solitude in his images of massive glaciers
People from around the world respond to optical illusions different. But why?
Musicians in a fair trade coffee cooperative hope to change the world through song and coffee
These booster rockets sent Apollo astronauts blasting to the Moon
This weekend, have your kids learn the science of flight, hear the history of a displaced North Dakota tribe and listen to local folk-rockers Kindlewood
Air travel is not just stressful for animals. It can be dangerous, no matter how smooth the landing, timely the departure or friendly the flight attendants
The new technology can be packed into a tiny space, requires no glasses and can project images and video in full color
New data indicate the spacecraft, launched in 1977, has neared interstellar space, more than 11 billion miles away from the Sun
Contrary to prior speculation about the elusive creatures, all giant squid belong to a single species and they all share very similar genetics
Initially a social club, the Women's Auxiliary grew to become one of the nation's most influential organizations in the country
One of behavioral psychology's most famous scientists was also one of the quirkiest
As we move closer to the Jetsonian vision of choosing outfits, privacy has gone out of fashion
While Hawaii was once the big kahuna in pineapple production, it's since been overtaken by other global powers
The Minke whale skeleton was probably on the seafloor for at least several decades and is only the sixth natural whale carcass ever found
Modern headphones have their origin in opera houses, military bases and a kitchen table in Utah
Conference-goers put into verse the ethane lakes on a Saturn moon, the orbital paths of Martian moons and a megachondrule's mistaken identity
A 100,000-year-old skull has a hole that reflects genetic mutations from inbreeding—likely a common behavior for our ancestors
Did he, and other Vikings, really use a brutal method of ritual execution called the "blood eagle"?
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